The Maryland senate has passed a bill that would locally overturn the
death penalty, placing the state closer to outlawing the practice.
“It’s time to end this ineffective and expensive practice and put our
efforts behind crime fighting strategies that work,” Gov. Martin
O'Malley (D) said in a statement.
The Maryland state senate voted 27 to 20 on March 6 to repeal the death
penalty. If passed, the legislation would would replace death sentences
with life in prison and no possibility of parole.
If the bill becomes law, the five inmates currently on death row would not be affected by the new measure.
It moves next to the state House of Delegates, which could vote on the
legislation early next week. The bill has the support of the state
Speaker of the House Michael E. Busch, along with 67 co-sponsors- four
delegates shy of a majority.
“I keep hearing that everything is on track for passage in the House,
and it would take something extraordinary to derail it,” Delegate Sam
Aurora, one of the bill's co-sponsors, to the Washington Times.
The death penalty is currently legal in 33 states, including Maryland, though Maryland has not executed a prisoner since 2005.
Governor Martin O’Malley is a strong supporter of the bill, introducing
it in January alongside its co-sponsors. O’Malley has attempted to
repeal the death penalty since first taking office in 2007. In 2009, he
sponsored a bill opposing capital punishment within the state, though it
was rejected by the state Senate.
The bill has been endorsed by the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People and Archbishop William E. Lori of the
Baltimore archdiocese has been a vocal supporter of the measure.
Archbishop Lori testified in Annapolis on Feb. 14 before the state
Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee and the House Judiciary Committee.
The hearings marked the first time that the archbishop, who chairs the
Maryland Catholic Conference, has appeared before the Maryland General
Assembly.
“While those who have done terrible harm to others deserve punishment,”
he said during his remarks, “we urge a response that meets evil with a
justice worthy of our best nature as human beings, enlightened by faith
in the possibility of redemption and forgiveness.”
If the legislation passes the local house, it may be placed on a
referendum before the state’s citizens, who could overturn the vote. The
outcome of that measure, if taken, would not be known until November.